December 28, 2024

Cape Town told to cut water use or face losing supply by 12 April

Residents will have to queue at standpipes for daily rations unless they drastically reduce consumption.

Cape Town residents may lose piped water to their homes within two months if they do not act to counter the effects of the worst drought to hit South Africa’s second city in almost a century.

Local authorities have warned four million people that if they do not reduce consumption by “day zero” – 12 April – they will have to queue at 200 standpipes for daily rations of 25 litres (6.6 US gallons).

The city, which attracts millions of tourists every year, has enforced strict waste controls, including prosecuting homeowners who use more than the 87-litre daily limit.

However, the measures have not been enough, forcing local officials to bring forward “day zero” by nine days.

“Due to a drop in the dam levels of 1.4%, day zero has, as of today, moved forward to 12 April,” the deputy mayor, Ian Neilson, said in a statement on Tuesday.

Every day that consumption exceeded 500m litres, the last day of normal water supply drew closer, he said.

The critically low Theewaterskloof dam in Villiersdorp.
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 The critically low Theewaterskloof dam in Villiersdorp. Photograph: Nic Bothma/EPA

“It is still possible to push back day zero if we all stand together now and change our current path.”

On 1 February, even stricter water restrictions come into force, limiting the maximum use per person to 50 litres a day, down from 87 litres. Earlier this year, the city published a name-and-shame list of the worst water offenders in Cape Town, and it says it is issuing fines for the heaviest water users.

Farmers have been asked to cut back on irrigation, car hire firms have stopped washing cars, hotels have restricted all uses of water, while tourists in self-catering accommodation have been asked to restrict personal washing.

 

For more read the full of article at The Guardian

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